Christine Negroni riffs on aviation and travel and whatever else inspires her to put words to page.

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Malaysian Artist's Mixed Media View of Aviation

Masnoor in his studio in April 2014

One night in Spain, I took a walk down to the edge of the
Mediterranean where a brilliant white moon seemed to turn the water into a sea
of graphite. I had no camera and so I challenged myself to recreate the scene with words.In his 2012 trip across the
Atlantic in a Pilatus PC 12, Malaysian painter Masnoor Ramli Mahmud was asked to do the opposite, tell the
story of trans-oceanic flight in pictures. The result is the one-man show, PATHFINDER#PC12,
which will open in Kuala Lumpur on November 27th.

Riza Johari while at ABC News

I got to known Masnoor through his wife, Riza Johari with whom I worked while covering the
disappearance of Malaysia Flight 370 for ABC News. Masnoor and I met in his sunny studio and he told me, until the invitation came for him to fly on the Pilatus from the United States to England, he had little interest in aviation. His art primarily focuses on social issues and cultural identity.

But a collector of his work approached him with a
proposition, would he go to America and accompany a Malaysian businessman and five
other pilots on a private flight across the Atlantic? The sponsor of the trip asked only that
Masnoor produce with paint or photography, his vision of the journey.

Masnoor told me he was nervous throughout the flight, crossing a big ocean in a small plane. By the time we met, was long-home safely but working on the painting he titled Kaleidoscope,
he was still remembering his mixed emotions. A man stands by the
Pilatus single engine turbo prop while white butterflies symbolizing positive
spirits, swirl above.

Immigrant

Even before boarding the Pilatus in Minnesota, Masnoor
was getting a glimpse of the link between aviation and geo politics. Arriving at
Los Angeles International Airport with no return ticket, customs and border
patrol officers gave him a hard time. To Masnoor, who crew up cheering on the
cowboys in American Western movies, that experience combined with flying over
the Rocky Mountains became a central question in two paintings; Immigrant and Go
My Hero For the Love of the Country.

“From Denver, when I saw the landscape and it reminded me of
when I was a kid and I saw a movies with Indians and the U.S. military fighting
each other. At that time I felt the Indians are bad people, and the white men
are trying to give them civilization.” Revising his childhood impressions to a
more mature perspective Masnoor uses the canvases to juxtapose colonialism with
immigration policies and asks, “What does the word ‘immigrant’ mean?”

Go
My Hero For the Love of the Country

Masnoor traveled through six countries, in some spending
just a few hours on the ground. He was inspired by the small child he met at
the Narsasuaq airport in Greenland to create the painting, NARSASUAQ and by the
statute of William Wallace he saw in Scotland. (Every Man Dies, Not Every Man
Really Lives).

NARSASUAQ

Though the majority of the paintings in the exhibit do not stray too far from
the artist’s interest in social justice, one stands out for its simple and joyful discovery of the serenity of flight and the miraculous machine that enables it.

Over Greenland, Masnoor is awestruck by a landscape of color rather
than texture. “I saw in that area so peaceful and without anything, just light and
snow and ice,” he explained of the painting, This World Which Is Made of Our
Love for Emptiness. “It struck me how the place is so big and me I am only a
small creation in this planet feeling that moment, that moment in that space
just man and his creator.”

This World Which Is Made of Our
Love for Emptiness

So it was a man who had become more attuned to flying who I met earlier this year. It was during the time when the missing Flight 370 dominated the thoughts of all Malaysians. Masnoor’s
take, that the disappearance of the airliner is more than a tragedy for the
families but an illustration of political dysfunction, is the theme ofAt The Edge of Nowhere, the one painting in
the exhibit not directly inspired by his trans-Atlantic trip.

Against a Chinese-inspired background of a roaring ocean, a
dragon and an eagle spar. An egg embossed with the image of an airplane is
precariously atop the horn of a buffalo. Is the egg the airline, the airplane
or the nation itself? The painting suggests it could be all three.

When Riza first introduced me to her artist husband, I thought we would have little in common, different as we are in age, culture and
profession. Now, as I look at the works of this wordless story-teller, I am reminded
of my evening in Spain and re-inspired to push at the confines of my own writing
as I join him in tackling similar themes, for Penguin Books; aviation, mystery and the ongoing quest for answers.